Baltimore Sun

Trial related to an FBI probe expected to explore ‘underbelly’

- By Tom Hays

NEWYORK— WhenBrianB­owenJr., one of America’s brightest high school basketball stars, announced in June 2017 that he would attend the University of Louisville, a school that had not been on anyone’s radar as his possible destinatio­n, sportswrit­ers called it a coup that “came out of nowhere.” Louisville coach Rick Pitino agreed.

“In my 40 years of coaching,” he said, “this is the luckiest I’ve been.”

In a trial that began Monday, federal prosecutor­s will argue that the signing wasn’t luck at all but the result of a payoff to Bowen’s father.

Former sports agent Christian Dawkins, former Amateur Athletic Union coach Merl Code and former Adidas executive James Gatto have all pleaded not guilty to charges they plotted to pay Bowen’s father $100,000 in exchange for his son’s promise to commit to Louisville. A jury was being selected Monday with opening statements set for today.

It is the first trial related to an FBI investigat­ion that exposed the sleazy side of big money in college basketball and led to charges against multiple people involved in making payments to student athletes. Other defendants, including former assistant coaches from Arizona, Auburn, Southern Cal and Oklahoma State, face separate trials.

Neither Bowen, now 19, nor his father, Brian Bowen Sr., has been charged. Nor has Pitino, who was fired by Louisville along with athletic director Tom Jurich after the investigat­ion became public.

Theindictm­ent says Adidas played a role in helping lure star players to its affiliated teams and keep them from going to teams sponsored by competitor­s like Nike. It also includes allegation­s that recruiters talked about using money from Adidas to pay two other families of prized high school basketball recruits, besides Bowen.

Lawyers for the defendants say any recruiting issues should have been the NCAA’s problem, not fodder for a federal prosecutio­n.

In one episode central to the case, investigat­ors recorded a meeting at a Las Vegas hotel in which Dawkins met with an assistant coach at Louisville and the director of an amateur team to talk about making backdoor cash payments to players, with the expectatio­n that he could manage their business affairs once they turned profession­al.

The men didn’t know that another person in the room was an FBI informant.

At the meeting, Dawkins was overheard warning how an Adidas competitor was “coming with a higher number” for Bowen’s family, the criminal complaint said. It said he also claimed he’d been in touch with the Louisville head coach about how to come with more money.

Prosecutor­s say the defendants settled on a plan to pay the Bowen family four $25,000 installmen­ts, with the money coming from Adidas, but disguised by routing it through an amateur team run by Merl Code.

They contend that the secret payments defrauded colleges because Bowen and other young athletes would not have qualified for generous scholarshi­ps if they were known to have accepted outside payments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States